Noble Daniel W A, Byrne Richard W, Whiting Martin J
Department of Biological Sciences, Macquarie University, Sydney, New South Wales 2109, Australia.
School of Psychology and Neuroscience, University of St Andrews, St Andrews, Fife, UK.
Biol Lett. 2014 Jul;10(7). doi: 10.1098/rsbl.2014.0430.
Evidence of social learning, whereby the actions of an animal facilitate the acquisition of new information by another, is taxonomically biased towards mammals, especially primates, and birds. However, social learning need not be limited to group-living animals because species with less interaction can still benefit from learning about potential predators, food sources, rivals and mates. We trained male skinks (Eulamprus quoyii), a mostly solitary lizard from eastern Australia, in a two-step foraging task. Lizards belonging to 'young' and 'old' age classes were presented with a novel instrumental task (displacing a lid) and an association task (reward under blue lid). We did not find evidence for age-dependent learning of the instrumental task; however, young males in the presence of a demonstrator learnt the association task faster than young males without a demonstrator, whereas old males in both treatments had similar success rates. We present the first evidence of age-dependent social learning in a lizard and suggest that the use of social information for learning may be more widespread than previously believed.
社会学习的证据表明,一种动物的行为有助于另一种动物获取新信息,从分类学角度来看,这种现象偏向于哺乳动物,尤其是灵长类动物和鸟类。然而,社会学习并不局限于群居动物,因为互动较少的物种仍然可以从了解潜在的捕食者、食物来源、竞争对手和配偶中受益。我们对来自澳大利亚东部的一种主要独居的蜥蜴——雄性蓝舌石龙子(Eulamprus quoyii)进行了一项两步觅食任务训练。将属于“年轻”和“年老”年龄组的蜥蜴置于一项新颖的工具任务(移开盖子)和一项关联任务(蓝色盖子下有奖励)中。我们没有发现关于工具任务存在年龄依赖性学习的证据;然而,有示范者在场时,年轻雄性蜥蜴比没有示范者的年轻雄性蜥蜴更快地学会了关联任务,而在两种处理方式下,年老雄性蜥蜴的成功率相似。我们首次展示了蜥蜴中存在年龄依赖性社会学习的证据,并表明利用社会信息进行学习的现象可能比之前认为的更为普遍。